Links

This page lists the links cited in this book. Clicking on the “Link #.#” will take you back the footnote in the book where that link is cited. You can view three versions of the sites: The “Live Site,” which takes you to the current online site, the “Cached” version, which is a saved HTML version of the site on our server, or the “PDF” version.

Link 0.14 — Daniel J. Cohen, “By the Book: Assessing the Place of Textbooks in U.S. Survey Courses,” Journal of American History 91 (March 2005): 1405-1415 (Live site | PDF)

Link 0.15 — Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute and National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage, The NINCH Guide to Good Practice in the Digital Representation and Management of Cultural Heritage Materials (Live site | Cached| PDF)

Link 1.17 — Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute (HATII) and National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage, The NINCH Guide to Good Practice in the Digital Representation and Management of Cultural Heritage MaterialsInterview Reports (Washington, D.C.: National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage, 2002) (Live site | PDF)

Link 1.18a — “The American Family Immigration History Center Fact Sheet,” American Family Immigration History Center (Live site | PDF)

Link 1.38b — Ignacio Gallup-Diaz, The Door of the Seas and Key to the Universe: Indian Politics and Imperial Rivalry in the Darien, 1640ľ1750 (New York: Columbia University Press, 2001) (Live site | PDF)

Link 1.53a — Mark Kornbluh and Peter Knupfer, “H-Net Ten Years On: Usage, Impact and the Problems of Professionalization in New Media” (paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Chicago, January 2003) (Live site | PDF)

Link 3.2b — National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage, The NINCH Guide to Good Practice in the Digital Representation and Management of Cultural Heritage Materials, (Washington, D.C.: National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage, 2002) (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 3.2d — Western States Digital Standards Group Digital Imaging Working Group, Western States Digital Imaging Best Practices, Version 1.0 (University of Denver and the Colorado Digitization Program; Denver, 2003) (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 4.8d — Many of the web design firms serving historical museums and societies attend the annual Museums and the Web conference and can be found through the registration list for that conference - The most recent list of companies and institutions. (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 5.7d — Katharine Kyes Leab & Daniel J. Leab American Book Prices Current Exhibition Awards “for excellence in the publication of catalogs and brochures that accompany exhibitions of library and archival materials, as well as for electronic exhibitions of such materials.” (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 6.26 —A full bibliography of survey design is available from the Laboratory for Automation Psychology and Decision Processing at the Human/Computer Interaction Laboratory at the University of Maryland (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 7.22a — “The Originality Requirement: Preventing the Copy Photography End-Run Around the Public Domain”, NINCH Copyright Town Meeting: The Public Domain: Implied, Inferred and In Fact, San Francisco, 5 April 2000(Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 7.53b — “The Originality Requirement: Preventing the Copy Photography End-Run Around the Public Domain” (paper presented at the NINCH Copyright Town Meeting: The Public Domain: Implied, Inferred and in Fact, San Francisco, 5 April 2000) (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 7.55a — Music Library Association, “What Impact Do Differences Between U.S. and European Copyright Laws Have on Peer to Peer (P2P) File Sharing?” Copyright for Music Librarians (Live site | Cached | PDF)

Link 8.4d — Building a National Strategy for Preservation: Issues in Digital Media Archiving (Washington, D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress, 2002) (Live Site | Cached | PDF)

Link 8.19b — “Alternate ways of accessing the Internet are constantly being introduced. The XHTML family is designed with general user agent interoperability in mind. Through a new user agent and document profiling mechanism, servers, proxies, and user agents will be able to perform best effort content transformation. Ultimately it will be possible to develop XHTML-conforming content that is usable by any XHTML-conforming user agent.” (Live Site | Cached | PDF)

Link 8.30b — “Because of a trademark dispute with Red Hat Inc., the Fedora project may have to change its name, even though it has used it since 1998, five years before Red Hat adopted it for one of its software releases.” (Live Site | Cached | PDF).

Link 8.30f — “OAIS provides a model that should enable individual digital archives to store materials effectively and sustain themselves over the long run. Note that this is, by CCSDS’ own admission, a high-level conceptual framework, not a ground-level working model.” (PDF).

Link 8.31a — ary Ide, Dave MacCarn, Thom Shepard, and Leah Weisse, “Understanding the Preservation Challenge of Digital Television,” in Building a National Strategy for Preservation: Issues in Digital Media Archiving (Washington, D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress, 2002), 67–79 (Live Site | Cached | PDF).

Link 8.31b — Howard D. Wactlar and Michael G. Christel, “Digital Video Archives: Managing Through Metadata,” in Building a National Strategy for Preservation: Issues in Digital Media Archiving (Washington, D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress, 2002), 80–95(Live Site | Cached | PDF).

Link 8.37e — Kenneth Thibodeau, “Overview of Technological Approaches to Digital Preservation and Challenges in Coming Years,” The State of Digital Preservation: An International Perspective (Washington, D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources, 2002) (Live Site | Cached | PDF).